Russian Kamchatka Gold postpones IPO to 2011-owner

July 15 (Reuters) – Russian tycoon Viktor Vekselberg said on Thursday he had decided to postpone an initial public offering of his gold firm, Kamchatka Gold, to at least 2011 from the fourth quarter of this year.

“But it (the IPO) will definitely happen,” Vekselberg told Reuters. In February, Vekselberg said he planned the IPO in Hong Kong. [ID:nLDE61E1PX] (Reporting by Natalya Shurmina, writing by Aleksandras Budrys)

Milkha may miss QBR”s arrival function in Chandigarh

Chandigarh, Jun 6 (PTI) The Queen”s Baton Relay for the Commonwealth Games will arrive in the city next month but legendary runner, “Flying Sikh” Milkha Singh may give the ceremony a miss. The 81-year-old Milkha is off to the United States for a month along with wife to see their golfer-son Jeev in action there and he is yet to decide whether to fly back to attend the ceremony.

“I am leaving for New York tonight. I would love to be back in Chandigarh when the CWG baton reaches here, but at this moment I cannot say that for sure,” Milkha told PTI. Milkha had won the 400m gold with a timing of 47.6 second in the 1958 Cardiff Commonwealth Games.

Chandigarh is gearing up to welcome various national and international sportspersons as well as spectators and tourists from different places when the baton arrives here on July 3. “Earlier, I had said yes to Chandigarh administration when they asked me if I was going to be available on July 3.

Now, once I reach the United States, I will take a call and hope that I am able to be here for the event,” Milkha said. The Commonwealth Games will be held from October 3-14 in Delhi.

Milkha also hoped that the Indian athletes will capitalise on the home support and come out with flying colours in the forthcoming quadrennial event. “Just have the will power and you can do it.

We are the host nation and it is the question of our honour and I am sure our sportspersons will keep our flag flying high,” he said.

Semenya’s return delayed as meet is cancelled

South African world 800 metres champion Caster Semenya’s return to competitive athletics has been delayed as her comeback event in Zaragoza has been cancelled, her coach told Reuters on Wednesday.

The 19-year-old underwent gender verification tests after winning gold at the Berlin world championships last August and has not competed since.

Semenya’s coach Michael Seme told Reuters by telephone “the meet (on June 24) is off and we will make an announcement on Tuesday” about her next move.

Athletics South Africa (ASA) has made clear Semenya is not banned from competition but said she must wait for the results of her tests from the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) which are not expected until June.

Her lawyers said in April that the tests proved she could run as a female.

(Reporting by Ken Borland; editing by Pritha Sarkar;

To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Geri Halliwell’s Union Jack dress voted the ‘Most Iconic Outfit Of Last 50 Years’

London, May 20 (ANI): Geri Halliwell’s Union Jack dress worn at the Brit awards in 1997 has topped an online poll of the ‘Most Iconic Outfits Of The Last 50 Years’.

The dress was the former Spice Girl’s own creation.

In the poll, Elizabeth Hurley’s Versace gold safety-pin dress, which made the actress an overnight star at the 1994 premiere of Four Weddings And A Funeral, came second.

“Everybody remembers the moment Geri hit the stage in that dress,” the Daily Express quoted Eve Atkins, of OffersSupermarket.co.uk which ran the poll, as saying.

“The dress made everybody feel patriotic, plus she looked amazing. It was simply a tea towel sewed on to a dress, with no designer involved,” Atkins added. (ANI)

Taxing a goldmine is never easy

The Federal Government’s response to Ken Henry’s tax review has been more about what won’t be done than what will be, which is why it would be a shame if one of the few recommendations actually adopted is killed by a mining lobby scare campaign.

Dr Henry seemed to know what was coming.

Back in January he warned in a speech that: “Tax reform is always difficult, even the things that are most obvious. That’s probably because it almost always confronts sectional interest.”

The Federal Government must have compiled a list of those sectional interests that were too broad, too large or too powerful to confront when it decided which proposals to reject outright in its response to the review.

This list must have included: home owners (including owner-occupied homes in means tests and land tax ruled out); families (return to work requirements for parents ruled out); investors (reduction in capital gains tax discount, change to negative gearing and changes to dividend imputation ruled out); pensioners (reduction of pension indexation ruled out); rich dead people and the beneficiaries of their wills (bequests tax ruled out).

The mining industry must have been deemed an easier target – there are certainly less people directly employed by miners than included in any of the above groups that were exempted from tax changes.

For example, only 26,887 people nominated their job as coal mining in the 2006 census, and 8,296 people said they were iron-ore miners.

Of course, there are engineers, builders and service providers that also rely on mining for their living, but other industries are far less mechanised and more labour intensive, such as banking and retail.

However, as Ken Henry pointed out in January, the big (and small) miners can certainly put up a good fight.

Back then he related a tax reform tale about how long it took to remove a total tax exemption for gold mining.

“The Australian gold tax exemption lasted nearly 70 years, despite its having absolutely no support in tax theory,” he observed.

“Long before its removal, it had become a source of embarrassment for Australian officials attending international tax policy conferences – we were the only OECD country that accorded a whole industry an exemption from tax. Even so, its removal was highly controversial.”

Scare campaign

As with the gold miners, the broader mining industry is putting up a strong fight to resist any increase in their current levels of taxation.

One commonly bandied argument is that mining companies already pay substantially more tax than other companies, because they pay state royalties in addition to the current 30 per cent corporate tax rate.

However, there is a reason why mining companies pay more tax – that is because their profits come from goods they did not manufacture and usually do not even own.

Laws passed by the states and Commonwealth mean they own most of the minerals located in and around Australia.

Effectively, mining companies are granted licences to dig up resources owned by the Australian community.

Therefore, unlike other types of corporate profits, they are being taxed not only for the benefit they receive from government infrastructure and legal systems, but also for the non-renewable, community-owned resources they are digging up and selling.

A resources tax or royalty can be more appropriately viewed as the price mining companies pay to buy the commodities from the Australian community. In this case, the Federal Government simply believes it’s been selling those commodities too cheaply, as illustrated by the large profits made by some mining companies.

The profit the company is allowed to keep can thus be viewed as a reward for the time it spent looking for the resources, the risk it wouldn’t find any and the expense and trouble of digging the commodities up and marketing them.

Not ‘the beginning of the end’

Another argument put forward by the mining companies is that a super profit tax will discourage investment in developing Australia’s resources.

Many industry sources would have you thinking that the mining industry will pack-up en masse and ship off to lower-taxed mines in Africa, Asia and the Americas.

This may be true in some cases, but it is clear that the main impact of the tax falls on companies that have existing mines that are already making profits.

The tax will not fall on a mine until it becomes profitable – the miner can off-set previous expenses so that the tax will not kick-in until a new mine has paid for its own exploration and development – and, if the mine later becomes unprofitable it won’t be subject to tax until it returns to the black.

All the tax does is reduce the profits of profitable mines, rather than making them suddenly unprofitable.

It may make some overseas destinations look relatively more attractive, but there are still some compelling reasons why mining companies look to operate in Australia.

The first is the quality and quantity of many different types of resources.

The second is the closeness of Australia to strongly growing Asian economies such as China and India, which makes transport costs a lot lower.

The third is Australia’s extensive existing infrastructure in many mining regions, and high levels of local skills and expertise in mining and related industries.

The fourth, and perhaps most important, is the relative stability of Australia’s governments and legal system – unlike many countries in the developing world, there is little chance that a new government will come in and nationalise your mine, or arrest your staff.

None of these factors are significantly altered by the proposed tax changes, meaning most companies will still want to mine Australian resources.

Just ask Fitch Ratings, which has left the ratings and outlooks of the major miners (BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto) unchanged after the tax announcement.

While the senior director of Fitch’s corporate ratings in Sydney, Julian Crush, says the proposal “isn’t good news” for the miners, he concludes: “This news does not mark the beginning of the end for the Australian mining industry. Demand for their product is simply too strong.”

And even if some marginally profitable mining prospects are ignored in the short-term, they will still be there in the long-run when supplies are short and prices are higher still.

Mining companies want the profits immediately, but the resources are going nowhere and will probably be worth even more to Australia in the future than they are now.

Interest rate impact

There has been much discussion about how the Federal Government’s stimulus package may have pushed up interest rates, by propping up consumer demand and putting pressure on inflation.

There’s certainly some economic logic that Australia’s better-than-expected economic growth, largely fuelled by the Government’s spending, has prompted the Reserve Bank to raise interest rates to match.

However, in recent months, the RBA has actually been far more concerned with the impact of the commodity boom on Australia’s national income and inflation than it has been about consumer spending (which has been pretty stagnant since the stimulus payments faded).

The Reserve’s governor, Glenn Stevens, again noted the inflationary impact of the resources boom in the statement explaining this month’s interest rate rise.

“Australia’s terms of trade are rising by more than earlier expected, and this year will probably regain the peak seen in 2008,” he wrote.

“This will add to incomes and foster a build-up in investment in the resources sector. Under these conditions, output growth over the year ahead is likely to exceed that seen last year, even though the effects of earlier expansionary policy measures will be diminishing.”

In this context, the Federal Government’s move to impose a higher tax on the mining sector, if it does actually reduce investment in that industry, is likely to take a little heat out of the boom and reduce some of the pressure for more rate rises.

Furthermore, a reduction in the pace of mining investment might free up some of the construction workforce tied up in building new mining projects to build more homes, potentially increasing supply and decreasing the cost of new housing (another area of concern for the RBA).

Taxing the booming resources industry more heavily than the struggling manufacturing and service sectors is one way to counter the return of the two-speed economy that saw many business and some households go to the wall at the hand of high interest rates in early to mid-2008 – high interest rates that were largely caused by the mining boom.

The mining super profits tax would help redistribute the benefits of the mining boom across the country, reducing the need for the Reserve Bank to use blunt interest rates to smash demand in all sectors, and keeping Australia’s economy more diversified.

Defence crew commended for SIEV 36 rescue

Twenty defence personnel have received commendations for their bravery during a fatal boat explosion near Ashmore Reef last year.

The asylum seeker boat known as SIEV 36 exploded near Ashmore reef last year.

Five asylum seekers were killed and dozens more were injured in the blast.

Crew from HMAS Albany provided treatment to 13 Afghan casualties in a makeshift burns unit on board their vessel.

Today, Rear Admiral Tim Barrett praised their skill and compassion for human life.

Two patrol boat crews received a commendation, while Corporal Sharon Jagher received an individual gold commendation for her efforts on the day she described as the worst of her life.

Traditional owners lose drilling injunction

An exploration company has been cleared of any unauthorised drilling at Bryah Basin in the Upper Gascoyne.

The Jidi Jidi Aboriginal Corporation had accused Alchemy Resources of breaching the conditions of its Indigenous Land Use Agreements at a gold and copper site, north of Meekatharra.

The corporation says the company did not carry out heritage surveys before drilling.

A spokesman for the Department of Mines and Petroleum says Alchemy did not breach its tenement conditions or carry out any unauthorised works.

The spokesman says the Federal Court determined that native title in the area had been extinguished.

Alchemy says it has not received any demand from the traditional owners to stop drilling in the Bryah Basin.

Easter tourism numbers strong in south-east Queensland

The head of the Queensland Tourism Industry Council, Daniel Gschwind, says operators in the south-east corner fared better than the rest of the state over the Easter break.

He says good weather contributed to stronger visitor numbers in Brisbane and on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts.

But Mr Gschwind says poor weather has kept holiday-makers away from other parts of the state.

“Cyclone Ului has probably put a few people off making a booking to other regional areas of Queensland,” he said.

“The floods we’ve had further west have put a few people off travelling.

“So the further away from Brisbane you get, the more difficult it has been for tourism operators, perhaps with the exception of the Whitsunday interestingly enough.”

Traditional owners oppose Alchemy drilling

The Department of Mines and Petroleum is investigating complaints from traditional owners over a drilling campaign at a gold and copper resource in Western Australia’s mid-west.

Traditional owners are demanding Alchemy Resources stop drilling in the Bryah Basin, north of Meekatharra, saying the company has breached the conditions of the Indigenous Land Use Agreements.

It is not the first time the owners have raised concerns about resource companies.

They are also angry with Sandfire Resources over drilling on land near the company’s Doolgunna gold and copper reserves.

Sandfire says every effort has been made to negotiate with the group but each offer has been rejected.

Alchemy Resources has been contacted for comment.

Mystery lotto millionaire still unknown

The owner of a winning million dollar lottery ticket is yet to come forward and claim the payout nearly two weeks after the draw.

A winning ticket for the March 27 lotto draw was purchased at the Miners Store in Coober Pedy.

SA Lotteries’ Rebecca Payne says someone from the opal mining town has struck gold but might not realise it yet.

“We’re still waiting to hear from the state’s mystery millionaire, who purchased a system entry for the lotto megadraw a couple of weeks ago at the Miners Store at Coober Pedy,” she said.

“As yet we haven’t heard from the lucky winner, so if you’ve got all six numbers on your ticket we would love to hear from you.”

Drummond Gold stops mine sale

A Queensland-based company has decided to cancel a planned development of a gold mine in central Victoria.

Drummond Gold had arranged to take ownership of the mine in exchange for giving shares to the current owner, Alliance Resources.

It was then planning to bring the mine back into production, after it was stopped in late 2008.

But the company has called off the sale this week after failing to find an acceptable way to raise $3 million in capital.

In a statement, Alliance Resources now says it will soon discuss the mine with several third parties who have expressed an interest.

CEO report indicates solid industry recovery

A poll of Australian chief executives shows growth in the country’s manufacturing, construction and services sectors is expected to be reasonably solid, but uneven in 2010.

The result is contained in the latest CEO survey, Industry in Recovery Mode in 2010, conducted by the Australian Industry Group and Deloitte.

An improvement was expected across all three industries, with particular strength in the services and manufacturing sectors.

The survey also found improving consumer confidence in incomes growth and employment prospects, as well as rising household wealth and exposure to strong growth in China, would drive growth this year.

But the fading effects of the Federal Government’s stimulus and the impact of higher interest rates were likely to hit the construction sector particularly hard.

On average, manufacturers were anticipating a 5.6 per cent increase in the nominal value of sales in 2010 to about $415 billion.

Sales in the services sector were set to rise 6.6 per cent and construction sales were forecast to grow by 2.5 per cent.

Employment in the manufacturing industry was expected to rise 2.9 per cent, service sector employment was due to increase by 2.3 per cent, and the construction sector was set for employment growth of just 0.5 per cent.

Those employers surveyed said the possible re-emergence of skills shortages was a real worry, as the economy returns to growth.

The chief executive of the Australian Industry Group, Heather Ridout says the economy looks set to consolidate this year, but the rebound won’t be as strong as those that occurred after previous downturns.

“Despite the stronger sales and employment expectations, investment trends across these sectors remain soft and conservative,” she said.

“The challenges for policy and for business will be to strengthen the recovery while addressing the ongoing requirement to build on the foundations of longer-term growth.”

The manufacturing partner for Deloitte, Damon Cantwell says 2010 would provide businesses with a range of opportunities to make up ground.

“While 2009 was characterised as a year founded on survival, 2010 offers real opportunities for growth,” he said.

Green light for $58m gold mine expansion

Multi-million dollar plans to expand a gold mine near West Wyalong have been conditionally approved.

Barrick Gold originally wanted to almost double the size and life of its Lake Cowal gold mine but modified the plan after court action last year from mine opponents.

Planning Minister Tony Kelly has approved the $58 million expansion, which he says will support 800 jobs over the next decade, including 370 at the mine.

“This approval will extend the mine’s life by two years and it allows for additional extraction of gold in that period,” he said.

Gold production for the life of the mine will rise to 3.1 million ounces and ore extraction will rise to 7.5 million tonnes, meaning increased blasting and other activity.”

Mr Kelly says Barrick will cut daily water usage and there are 18 conditions on the project, including noise mitigation measures.

David Beckham, actor James Corden get ‘naked’ for a bubble bath!

London, Mar 17 (ANI): English footballer David Beckham was pictured sharing a bubble bath with actor James Corden.

Beckham, 34, stripped off in a hilarious sketch for the BBC’s Sport Relief, which was filmed in Milan several weeks ago before he tore his left Achilles.

“It is undoubtedly the single funniest scene ever filmed for Sport Relief or Comic Relief,” the Mirror quoted a source as saying.

“David and James, who was playing his alter-ego Smithy, got on famously and really sparked off one another. In the three-minute scene, the pair share a romantic candle-lit bath for no other reason than they want to.

“David even gives James’s body an appreciative nod at one point. Forget comedy gold – this is comedy platinum,” the source added. (ANI)

SE Qld whipped by strong winds

Strong winds have caused blackouts in parts of south-east Queensland.

Energex crews have restored power to more than 12,000 homes and businesses after strong winds battered the region on Friday afternoon.

Gale-force winds blew down trees and damaged powerlines on Brisbane’s bayside, and the Gold and Sunshine Coasts.

Energex spokesman Graham Metcalfe says about 300 properties were still without power on Friday evening.

“The main areas that have been impacted have been along the coastal fringes, especially some of those exposed areas where we’ve had winds recorded up to close to 100 kilometres an hour, as well as on top of some of the ridges,” he said.

“There’s been some power interruptions in those areas.”

Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) forecaster Vikash Prasad says the winds should ease by Saturday.

“For the rest of today we still expecting quite gusty winds getting up to 100 kilometres [per hour] mark but tomorrow the wind is expected to drop,” he said.

“So we should see the strong winds persisting about the coast but not getting as strong as today.”

405th installation anniversary of Sri Guru Granth Sahib

Agra, Sep 19(ANI): People of all religions and communities gathered to celebrate the 405th anniversary of the installation of the Sikh holy scriptures, Sri Guru Granth Sahib, at Gurudwara Maithan in Agra.

This was a significant landmark for the Sikhs, as the 275-year-old handwritten scripture, whose front pages are written with gold, was put on display for the devotees.

“The Guru Granth Sahib has the preaching or ‘bani’ of famous poets like Kabir ji, Guru Ravidas ji and Baba Farid ji. It is symbol of humanity and so people of all the religions have gathered here to celebrate the ‘Prakash Parv’, the installation ceremony together,” said Kanwldeep Singh, President of Sri Gursikh Sabha.

Also on display was a miniature scripture of Guru Granth Sahib, which has been preserved at the Gurudwara Maithan for the past 15 years.

“We have Guru Granth sahib of 1 X 1 inches long. The British for the convenience of Sikh soldiers especially designed the holy book during the First World War, as they could not carry a normal sized book in the battlefield. The miniature Guru Granth Sahib was printed in Germany. It was kept in a silver box,” said Gyani Kashmir Singh, head Granthi of Gurudwara Maithan.

To mark the anniversary of the installation of Guru Granth Sahib, special prayers were also held in the Gurudwara premises, which once the house of Mai jassi that was visited by Guru Sri Tegh Bahadur.he gurudwara is currently undergoing renovation and will be expanded to facilitate the large number of devotees visiting the shrine.

A total of 20 million dollars will be spent on renovation and construction of new Gurudwara, a 100-bed hospital and a community hall.

Gurudwara Maithan also upheld the tradition of Langar, which has been followed over the centuries. Guru Arjan Dev and Mata Ganga set the precedent of preparing and serving food to the hungry, in the langar hall, where all social, economic and religious barriers collapse and all – the laborer, the lord, the peasant and the prince, are treated alike and served the same food in the same manner.

This is a practice of great social significance, and it is the key to the understanding of Sikhism. By Brijesh Sharma (ANI)

Mika to moonwalk in MJ’s shoes

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Beirut-born singer Mika is set to fill Michael Jackson’s shoes, for he has inherited the late King of Pop’s designer shoes, including the ones the late superstar was to moonwalk in onstage at London’s O2 Arena.

The ‘Thriller’ hit-maker had hired Mika’s good friend Christian Louboutin to design all the fancy footwear for his ‘This Is It’ concerts.

But after Michael’s sudden death, Mika, 26, ended up with the lot.

Mika, whose ‘The Boy Who Knew Too Much’ album will be out next week, has now talked about the shoes.

“Christian Louboutin designed all of Michael Jackson’s shoes that he was supposed to be wearing for the O2 concerts,” the Mirror quoted him as saying.

“So when he died, Christian asked if I wanted them for my tour. They are amazing. One is a black soft leather lace-up which goes up to the ankle to support Michael while he was dancing.

“Then there is the pair which must have been made for him to moonwalk in. They are gold with a metal toe and the soles are really smooth and slippy to make it easy to moonwalk in.

“I think they are the only pair I might not wear. It’s a little freaky to think he’d have worn those to do the moonwalk in.

“Then again, who knows, it might give me some magic power to help me dance rather than just jumping around the stage like an idiot,” he added. (ANI)

Charlize Theron blames OCD for turning her into clean-freak

Washington, Sept 16 (ANI): Charlize Theron has admitted that obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has turned her into a clean-freak.

“I have a serious problem, it’s a real disease and millions of people actually suffer from this, it’s an obsessive-compulsive disorder. I have a bit of it,” Contactmusic quoted her, as saying.

She added: “I don’t do counting or any of that stuff, but I have a real thing about chaos. I am good with chaos, I just don’t like it when chaos is hidden.

“I have a problem with cabinets being messy and people just shoving things in cabinets and closing the door.

“You can’t. I really, really lie in bed and (am) not able to sleep because I think, ‘I saw something in that cabinet that just shouldn’t be there.’”

Meanwhile, Theron recently walked the red carpet for the premiere of her new film The Burning Plain.

The South African-born beauty, who was named Esquire’s Sexiest Woman Alive in 2007, wowed at the premiere of her new film in Los Angeles.

The actress rocked a belted bright yellow chiffon dress with embellished shoulders, which she teamed with some fierce gold and yellow gladiator heels and a metallic studded clutch. (ANI)

IAAF in a fix as tests prove Semenya is a hermaphrodite

Melbourne, Sep 11 (ANI): The International Association of Athletics Federations is likely to strip champion runner Caster Semenya of the gold medal she won in Berlin last month, as a test has shown that she is a hermaphrodite – a person with both female and male sexual characteristics.

The tests, not yet publicly released, show the 18-year-old has no womb or ovaries.

The IAAF is expected to disqualify the South African from future events and advise her to have surgery because her condition carries grave health risks, The Daily Telegraph reports.

And she could be stripped of the gold medal she won in Berlin in last month, as she has three times more testosterone than a normal female.

A source closely involved with the IAAF tests said Semenya had internal testes — the male sexual organs, which produce testosterone.

“There certainly is evidence Semenya is a hermaphrodite. But the trouble is the IAAF now has the whole ANC and the whole of South Africa on their backs. Everything is going to have to be done absolutely by the book, no question of a challenge to the findings,” the source said.

It is believed that Semenya is unaware the tests has identified her as a hermaphrodite.

Only the certainty of a backlash from South Africa has so far prevented the IAAF from banning Semenya and revoking her gold medal.

South Africa embraced the feisty teenager after the storm of controversy from Berlin, declaring her “Our girl”.

African National Congress MP and National Assembly sports committee chairman Butana Komphela has already lodged a complaint with the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights, accusing the IAAF of racism and sexism.

The IAAF expects to receive the full set of results this week. (ANI)

Surat diamond traders hope to shine at China’s diamond festival

Surat, Sep. 8 (ANI): Diamond traders in Surat are expecting good business during the upcoming National Gold and Diamond festival week in China.

The Indian diamond cutting industry was one of the badly hit sectors due to the global recession.

“The upcoming show in Hongkong will provide good market to Indian diamonds. This is a great help as we were going through recession. This is a good signal for diamond Industry here,” said Prakash Bhai, a diamond trader.

A lot of foreign tourists will throng National Gold and Diamond festival week to be hosted in Hongkong.

Traders are hopeful that tourist will buy Indian Diamonds in good amount.

“During the festival season, we not only expect Chinese public to buy diamonds in good amount but also lot of tourists who will visit the fair. They will also be attracted towards jewellery and diamonds showcased there. This in turn will benefit Surat diamond Industry a lot,” said Rohit Sharma, President Diamond Association, Surat.

The Surat diamond industry is worth 800,000 million rupees and accounts for more than half of the total diamond exports from India.

It employs more than 700,000 workers from across the country. Over 2.5 million people are indirectly associated with the trade.

The diamonds processed in Surat are sent to various parts of the world including the Middle East from where manufactured jewellery is then sold across the globe.

The United States, one of the largest markets for diamonds and other gemstones, imports 60 percent of diamonds cut and processed in Surat. (ANI)